> On Thu, 14 Oct 2004 19:27:59 -0500 (CDT), krivilli at unberwoot.net> <krivilli at unberwoot.net> wrote:
>> -I did look your code again and there is another issue.
>>>> -You should also notice that u're calling gplt.plot recursively from
>> time_series(), so it will pop-up a new window every time it's called
>> (different scopes).
>>>> I sometimes have matrix data that need to be plotted separately, so I
> dont have much choice but to recurse.
>>> -What you could do is to plot 'just once', using a matrix. For example,
>> for a 2-D plot, say y(t) x t, u can store every new set of data in the
>> columns of matrix 't' (abscissas) and matrix 'y' (ordinates), and then
>> plot it ('t' and 'y' must have the same shape).
>>>> But I would still have to save them serially, wouldnt I? That is where
> the trouble arises, since the window gets disabled after saving.
-Yeah, but it's quite different efect when calling it (plot) from the same
scope:
def time_series(params,...):
# Build 'y' matrix and 't' matrix
.
.
.
# now we plot it
for i in iterator:
plot(x[:,i],y[:,i])
output("plot%d.ps" % i,'postscript color')
#u can call close(), no need though
close()
-This is different then use time_series() two times for two different data
sets. Something like:
class time_series(params,...):
def __init__():
.
.
.
def plot(data):
#same code for ploting here
.
.
.
MyClass = time_series(foo,...)
MyClass.plot(data1)
MyClass.plot(data2)
-This isn't quite the same.
regards,
-- roberto